Don't Become An Obesity Statistic

Americans are bombarded with information about "healthy eating," but we suffer from higher rates of obesity and chronic disease than ever before.

Americans are bombarded with information about "healthy eating," but we suffer from higher rates of obesity and chronic disease than ever before. In fact, obesity rates increased in 23 states last year and did not decline anywhere, according to a recent report[7] published by the Trust for America's Health. Read the report here[7].

Four states reported their adult obesity rates at 30 percent or higher. In addition, 30 states reported their percentage of overweight or obese children at higher than 30 percent.

As a nation, we are increasingly eating more processed and fast foods. Our supermarkets are full of convenient packaged foods that appeal to our taste buds, but compromise our nutrition[8].

It is easy to fall into the pattern of eating fast, convenient, prepared food, but we are not nurturing ourselves by doing so. Our Standard American Diet lacks nutrients and relies heavily on processed foods. Our fast foods remove us from the pleasures of creating and savoring a wonderful meal, and our fast pace often prevents us from connecting over a good, slow meal. We tend to eat for convenience and speed, not health and pleasure.

How can I combat obesity?

Start by focusing on foods you should eat, rather than those you shouldn't eat.

"During the past few decades, the focus seems to have been on foods to avoid or 'good' food versus 'bad' food," says Carolyn Denton[10], Licensed Nutritionist, Abbot Northwestern's Institute for Health and Healing. "But what qualified as bad kept changing. First it was fats, then carbs. However, current research shows that what we fail to eat may impact our health more than eating 'bad' foods."

Along with this negative focus, we often experience a large gap between knowledge and action. We are all aware that fruits, vegetables and whole grains should be the major elements of our diet. We are also aware that diet alone is not as effective in achieving a healthy body weight as [11]diet[12] combined with exercise[13]. However there is often a gap between our knowledge of what to do and our actually doing it.